Astronomy Picture of the Day |
APOD: 2000 January 11 - The Rosette Nebula in Hydrogen, Oxygen, and
Sulfur
APOD: 1996 June 6 - The North America Nebula
APOD: 1998 August 28 - Hydrogen Trifid
Authors & editors:
Robert
Nemiroff
(MTU)
& Jerry Bonnell (USRA)
Explanation:
The Rosette Nebula is a large
emission nebula located 3000 light-years away.
The great abundance of
hydrogen gas gives
NGC 2237 its red color in most
photographs.
The
wind from the
open cluster of stars known as
Explanation:
Here's a familiar shape in an unfamiliar location! This
emission nebula is
famous partly because it resembles
Earth's
North American Continent. To the
right of the North America Nebula is a less luminous Pelican Nebula. Let's
be grateful that
pelicans
aren't really that large! The two emission
nebula are located about 1500 light years away and are separated by a
dark absorption cloud.
The nebulae can be seen without a telescope from a
dark location. Look for a small nebular patch north-east of
Deneb in
the
constellation
of Cygnus. It is still unknown which star or stars ionize the
red-glowing hydrogen gas.
Explanation:
Clouds of glowing hydrogen gas mingle with dark dust lanes in
the Trifid Nebula,
a star forming region in the constellation Sagittarius.
In this and other similar emission
nebulae, energetic
ultraviolet light from an embedded hot young star strips
electrons from the surrounding
hydrogen atoms.
As the
electrons and atoms recombine they emit longer wavelength,
lower energy light in a well known
characteristic pattern of bright spectral lines.
At visible wavelengths,
the strongest emission line in this pattern is in the
red part of the spectrum and is known as "Hydrogen-alpha" or just H-alpha.
This image of the nebula was taken using a filter to select
only light near the H-alpha wavelength.
It shows those regions with substantial
emission from
atomic hydrogen.
The relative strength of this emission can trace the
densities of atoms within the gas cloud.
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